| Standard Name | ADH5 |
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| Systematic Name | YBR145W |
| Feature Type | ORF, Verified |
| Description | Alcohol dehydrogenase isoenzyme V; involved in ethanol production; ADH5 has a paralog, ADH1, that arose from the whole genome duplication (1, 2 and see Summary Paragraph) |
| Name Description | Alcohol DeHydrogenase |
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| View Computational GO annotations for ADH5 | |
| Molecular Function | |
| Manually curated | |
| Biological Process | |
| Manually curated | |
| Cellular Component | |
| High-throughput |
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| 15 total interaction(s) for 14 unique genes/features. | |
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| Localization | |
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| Phosphorylation | PhosphoGRID | PhosphoPep Database |
| Structure | |
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| Last Update | Coordinates: 2011-02-03 | Sequence: 1997-01-28 | ||||||||||||
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| S288C only | |
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| S288C vs. other species | |
| S288C vs. other strains |
| External Links | All Associated Seq | E.C. | Entrez Gene | Entrez RefSeq Protein | MIPS | Search all NCBI (Entrez) | UniProtKB |
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| Primary SGDID | S000000349 |
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In S. cerevisiae, there are five genes that encode alcohol dehydrogenases involved in ethanol metabolism, ADH1 to ADH5. Four of these enzymes, Adh1p, Adh3p, Adh4p, and Adh5p, reduce acetaldehyde to ethanol during glucose fermentation, while Adh2p catalyzes the reverse reaction of oxidizing ethanol to acetaldehyde (3, 4, 5, 6, 1).
The five ethanol dehydrogenases (Adh1p, Adh2p, Adh3p, Adh4p, and Adh5p) as well as the bifunctional enzyme Sfa1p are also involved in the production of fusel alcohols during fermentation (7). Fusel alcohols are end products of amino acid catabolism (of valine, leucine, isoleucine, methionine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, and tyrosine) via the Ehrlich pathway and contribute to the flavor and aroma of yeast-fermented foods and beverages (8). They may also have physiological roles. For example, exposing cells to isoamyl alcohol, derived from catabolism of leucine, stimulates filamentous growth (9, 10). Similarly, other fusel alcohols also stimulate filamentous growth in S. cerevisiae and biofilm formation in the pathogens Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis (11, 12, reviewed in 8).
ADH5 was first identified through sequencing of chromosome II and shares 76%, 77%, and 70% sequence identity with ADH1, ADH2, and ADH3, respectively (13, 14). Because it is not the main enzyme responsible for processing acetaldehyde, Adh5p activity is only apparent in an adh1 adh3 double null mutant (1). ADH5 expression is upregulated by DMSO (15). ADH5 transcription is also significantly increased in an S. cerevisiae mutant strain that is able to grow anaerobically on xylose, a carbon source not normally utilized by yeast in the absence of oxygen (16).
About the medium-chain dehydrogenase/reductase (MDR) family
Medium-chain dehydrogenase/reductases (MDRs), sometimes referred to as long-chain dehydrogenases (17), constitute an ancient and widespread enzyme superfamily with members found in Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukaryota (18, 19). Many MDR members are basic metabolic enzymes acting on alcohols or aldehydes, and thus these enzymes may have roles in detoxifying alcohols and related compounds, protecting against environmental stresses such as osmotic shock, reduced or elevated temperatures, or oxidative stress (18). The family also includes the mammalian zeta-crystallin lens protein, which may protect the lens against oxidative damage and enzymes which produce lignocellulose in plants (18).
MDR enzymes typically have subunits of about 350 aa residues and are two-domain proteins, with a catalytic domain and a second domain for binding to the nicotinamide cofactor, either NAD(H) or NADP(H) (18, 19). They contain 0, 1, or 2 zinc atoms (20). When zinc is present, it is involved in catalysis at the active site.
Based on phylogenetic and sequence analysis, the members of the MDR superfamily can be further divided into more closely related subgroups (18, 19). In families which are widespread from prokaryotes to eukaryotes, some members appear conserved across all species, while others appear to be due to lineage specific duplications. Some subgroups are only found in certain taxa. S. cerevisiae contains fifteen (18) or twenty-one (19) members of the MDR superfamily, listed below. The difference in number is due to six sequences that were included as members of the quinone oxidoreductase family by Riveros-Rosas et al. (19) but not by Nordling et al. (18).
Zinc-containing enzyme groups:
- PDH; "polyol" dehydrogenase family - BDH1, BDH2, SOR1, SOR2, XYL2
- ADH; class III alcohol dehydrogenase family - SFA1
- Y-ADH; "yeast" alcohol dehydrogenase family - ADH1, ADH2, ADH3, ADH5
- CADH; cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase family - ADH6, ADH7
Non-zinc-containing enzyme groups:
- NRBP; nuclear receptor binding protein (19) or MRF; mitochondrial respiratory function (18) family - ETR1
- QOR; quinone oxidoreductase family - ZTA1 (18, 19), AST1, AST2, YCR102C, YLR460C, YMR152W, YNL134C (19)
- LTD; leukotriene B4 dehydrogenases - YML131W
- ER; enoyl reductases (19) or ACR; acyl-CoA reductase (18) family - no members in S. cerevisiae
| 1) | Smith MG, et al. (2004) Microbial synergy via an ethanol-triggered pathway. Mol Cell Biol 24(9):3874-84 |
| 2) | Byrne KP and Wolfe KH (2005) The Yeast Gene Order Browser: combining curated homology and syntenic context reveals gene fate in polyploid species. Genome Res 15(10):1456-61 |
| 3) | Bennetzen JL and Hall BD (1982) The primary structure of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene for alcohol dehydrogenase. J Biol Chem 257(6):3018-25 |
| 4) | Russell DW, et al. (1983) Nucleotide sequence of the yeast alcohol dehydrogenase II gene. J Biol Chem 258(4):2674-82 |
| 5) | Young ET and Pilgrim D (1985) Isolation and DNA sequence of ADH3, a nuclear gene encoding the mitochondrial isozyme of alcohol dehydrogenase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Cell Biol 5(11):3024-34 |
| 6) | Drewke C and Ciriacy M (1988) Overexpression, purification and properties of alcohol dehydrogenase IV from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochim Biophys Acta 950(1):54-60 |
| 7) | Dickinson JR, et al. (2003) The catabolism of amino acids to long chain and complex alcohols in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem 278(10):8028-34 |
| 8) | Hazelwood LA, et al. (2008) The Ehrlich pathway for fusel alcohol production: a century of research on Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolism. Appl Environ Microbiol 74(8):2259-66 |
| 9) | Kern K, et al. (2004) Isoamyl alcohol-induced morphological change in Saccharomyces cerevisiae involves increases in mitochondria and cell wall chitin content. FEMS Yeast Res 5(1):43-9 |
| 10) | Hauser M, et al. (2007) A transcriptome analysis of isoamyl alcohol-induced filamentation in yeast reveals a novel role for Gre2p as isovaleraldehyde reductase. FEMS Yeast Res 7(1):84-92 |
| 11) | Dickinson JR (1996) 'Fusel' alcohols induce hyphal-like extensions and pseudohyphal formation in yeasts. Microbiology 142 ( Pt 6)():1391-7 |
| 12) | Lorenz MC, et al. (2000) Characterization of alcohol-induced filamentous growth in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Biol Cell 11(1):183-99 |
| 13) | Feldmann H, et al. (1994) Complete DNA sequence of yeast chromosome II. EMBO J 13(24):5795-809 |
| 14) | Ladriere JM, et al. (2000) Kluyveromyces marxianus exhibits an ancestral Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome organization downstream of ADH2. Gene 255(1):83-91 |
| 15) | Zhang W, et al. (2003) Microarray analyses of the metabolic responses of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to organic solvent dimethyl sulfoxide. J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol 30(1):57-69 |
| 16) | Sonderegger M, et al. (2004) Molecular basis for anaerobic growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae on xylose, investigated by global gene expression and metabolic flux analysis. Appl Environ Microbiol 70(4):2307-17 |
| 17) | Jornvall H, et al. (1981) Alcohol and polyol dehydrogenases are both divided into two protein types, and structural properties cross-relate the different enzyme activities within each type. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 78(7):4226-30 |
| 18) | Nordling E, et al. (2002) Medium-chain dehydrogenases/reductases (MDR). Family characterizations including genome comparisons and active site modeling. Eur J Biochem 269(17):4267-76 |
| 19) | Riveros-Rosas H, et al. (2003) Diversity, taxonomy and evolution of medium-chain dehydrogenase/reductase superfamily. Eur J Biochem 270(16):3309-34 |
| 20) | Persson B, et al. (1999) Bioinformatics in studies of SDR and MDR enzymes. Adv Exp Med Biol 463:373-7 |





